Sunday, March 03, 2013

Sermon for Sunday, March 3, 2013 Lent III Luke 13:1-9 “Oneof These Things Is Not Like the Other”

It is a fact. Study the Bible, and you
can look at things over and over again and you see what you expect to see, what
you’ve always seen, but the truth is that you have been missing something that
you should have noticed.

I like to think that I’m a halfway
decent student of Scripture, but I am as likely to miss something surprising
and completely obvious in the Bible as the next person. So when I began my
preparation on today’s gospel, I immediately thought of the way that Jesus uses
this parable of the fig tree to talk about fruitfulness and about penitence. I
was in good company – most of the commentaries on the parable say pretty much
the same thing. Nothing surprising there – this is a message that Jesus says
either directly or through parables elsewhere in the gospels.

But I was missing something.
Something I hadn’t noticed before. So much for being a smarty-pants Biblical
scholar.

I didn’t notice it until it was
mentioned by a colleague, the Rev Eric Law, an Asian-American priest who works
on the West Coast. Eric was leading a Bible study on today’s gospel passage with
a group of Chinese refugees. One of the people in the group posed a question:
“What’s a fig tree doing in a vineyard?”

Wow. The obvious question, and one
that no one ever posed before. What’s a fig tree doing in a vineyard? If you’ve
ever gone on one of those winery tours, you’ll see row upon row of well-tended
vines, beautifully supported by trellises or frames. Occasionally, you will see
a rose bush planted at each end of a row of vines, a tradition that was brought
from France. But you will never see another plant that will take nutrients from
the soil that could benefit the grapevines. A grower would not compromise his
plantings by throwing a wild card into the ground, and a fig tree could be
considered such a wild card.

What is a fig tree doing in a
vineyard? It doesn’t belong there. It is like the old children’s game “one of
these things is not like the other.” The fig tree doesn’t belong there.

But let’s assume, at this stage of
this sermon, that the grower had his reasons for planting the fig tree in the
vineyard. Maybe he didn’t have another spot for it, maybe he just didn’t think
much about it and just plopped it there on a hot afternoon when he didn’t have
the energy to put it in its proper place.

The grower goes out into the
vineyard, sees that fig tree there, and is aggravated, because this is the
third year that tree has leafed out, but it still hasn’t fruited.

Now imagine you’re living in a hot
place, where water is at a premium. For three years you’ve waited for this tree
to offer you something in return for the nurturing and water…and you’ve gotten
not a single fig. You can taste the rich luscious sweetness in your
imagination, but you sure can’t taste it in real life, because this useless
tree still hasn’t produced a single fig. Can you feel the frustration and
annoyance that the grower is feeling? So, not surprisingly, the grower says to
his gardener, “Trash that tree. It is a waste of land and water.”

Makes sense, doesn’t it? Why would
you keep such a fruitless tree in your yard? And it isn’t entirely out of
character for a grower to do that. After all, every year he instructs his
gardener to prune the grapevines, so that they might be more fruitful. It’s a
common practice – indeed, it is one that is encouraged for grapes - to get rid
of dead vines that no longer produce. So why not yank that fig tree out of the
ground and toss it on the compost pile?

The gardener has another idea. “Sir,
let me nurture it for another year, put manure around it, give it some extra
water. I think if we are patient, it will fruit next year. And if it doesn’t, I
will dispose of it as you wish.”

The gardener wants to give the fig
tree one more chance to do what it is meant to do, to be fruitful.

Jesus doesn’t tell us what the
grower says in response to this request – we presume he grudgingly agrees. He
has his doubts, but he thinks “what can it harm me to give it one more year?”

One more chance.

Now here’s where it gets interesting,
because I want to loop back to that Bible study that Father Eric was leading. The
same person who asked why a fig tree was in the vineyard asked another
question. “’What kind of
fruit is this man looking for?’ He continued his inquiry. ‘If he is
looking for grapes, he isn’t going to find any. Besides, the Chinese name
of fig is no-flower fruit; so a fig tree bears fruit very differently from the
grapevines.’”[1]

Maybe
the grower was expecting his fig tree to produce in exactly the same way that
his grapes did. Here’s a Google fact for today: it takes fig trees between
three and five years to produce fruit.[2]

So
it wasn’t so odd for three years to pass without fruit for that fig tree. The
fig tree was doing exactly what fig trees do. They grow for a few years before
they start to produce. Perhaps the gardener knew this, perhaps not. But
something in him said, “maybe if we continue to encourage this tree, it will
fruit next year.”

More likely,and to state the
obvious, the gardener knew that the fig tree was not a grapevine. Fig trees and
grapevines are very different plants, and you cannot expect a fig tree to act
like a grapevine. Fig trees take longer to produce first fruit. By the same
token, they do not require the rigorous pruning and trellising that grapes do. Grapes
are not the same as figs, and that is just fine.

The fig tree got a second chance.
The gardener was willing to work with the tree and encourage it, when that
vineyard owner was ready to judge it permanently useless.

As with all of Jesus’ parables,
there are the interpretations that are built on the most obvious reading, and
there are the deeper ones that we discover when we look for the thing that was
there all along and that we all missed.

This is not just a story about
fruitfulness, and how the trees that do not bear fruit will be destroyed. It is
also a story about second chances, about the fact that each of us need second
chances.

None of us is fruitful all the time.
We have our fallow times, our times of darkness and troubles, our times when we
have nothing to offer the world. But somehow, the Lord keeps giving us second
chances, nudging us toward fruitfulness once again. We do need that, don’t we?

And the corollary to that – you knew
I’d turn this around, don’t you? – is that none of us has the right to act like
the vineyard owner, judging that something or someone is useless and needs to
be discarded. If the Lord is willing to
give us a second chance, if the Lord sees that each of us develops as spiritual
beings at different rates and keeps on nurturing us even when it seems we will
never get it, if the Lord says “one more year,” who are we to judge who is
fruitful and who should be cast out into the darkness?

The Rev. Mary Brennan Thorpe

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About Me

A second (actually fifth) career Episcopal priest, I am serving as Director of Transition Ministry in the Episcopal Diocese of Virginia. I help parishes find priests and priests find new calls.How did a RC convent girl with a Teamster shop-steward dad end up here?
Married to Pastoral Husband, AKA PH, an ordained minister and full-time pastoral counselor. Three kids from the prior marriage: Strong Opinions, artistic 24 y.o. girl trying on the world for size, Stonemason, 26 y.o. guy working with his hands in the North Country, Litigator, highly verbal 29 y.o. with aspirations to be the next Michael Moore. Two stepsons, 4 step grandkids, a cat. Way too many books.Well, there are never too many books...